If you've ever worked with Pinnacle Studio on your PC, you'll feel right at home with the app's similarly straightforward interface. Though you can work with it in portrait view, landscape offers the better layout, with the top half of the screen devoted to your media and a preview window and the bottom half reserved for storyboarding.

To build a movie, you simply drag a photo, video clip, transition effect, title, or song to the storyboard or timeline, then arrange those elements to your liking.

The app also lets you trim clips, overlay sound effects and voice recordings, add custom pan-and-zoom effects, and so on. It supplies a handful of motion and static titles, but you can edit things like colors, fonts, and sizes to create more-customized text. Unfortunately, I could find no way to overlay a title on a photo or video; it seems you're limited to title cards that bookend them.

When you're done, you can export your movie to Facebook, e-mail, a video file, YouTube, or even Pinnacle Studio for PC. Version 2.0 adds support for Box as well, making it easier to share and save your projects in the cloud. (Personally, I'd prefer Dropbox to Box, but I guess beggars can't be choosers.)

Also new in 2.0: 1080p rendering and output, which was sorely lacking in previous versions.

Pinnacle includes a 56-page user guide that's clear and informative, though it doesn't answer certain questions (like whether you can overlay a title). Although I had a fairly easy time figuring out how to use the app, I was already intimately familiar with Pinnacle Studio for PC. Your mileage may vary.

But make no mistake: Pinnacle Studio 2.0 for iPad offers fairly robust video editing for a price that's impossible to beat. I have no idea why Corel isn't charging for this app (perhaps a future update will offer in-app purchases of things like extra effects), but I'm definitely not complaining.